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- <text id=92TT2488>
- <title>
- Nov. 02, 1992: The Political Interest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Nov. 02, 1992 Bill Clinton's Long March
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST, Page 47
- Don't Waste Your Vote
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> If Ross Perot is elected President, it will not be the
- first time people buy something they don't need. A slick
- salesman's perfected pitch often trumps good judgment, and if
- a peddler lives who rivals Perot, he exists only in fiction. To
- an electorate eager for one thing above all others -- leadership
- of clear purpose, candidly proclaimed -- Perot seems a welcome
- breath of fresh air. With the penetrating clarity common to the
- slightly deranged, and with an air of bustling purposiveness,
- Perot has about him a kind of gravitas that appears to transmute
- political banalities into profound insights. Hear his practiced
- homilies during the presidential debates, watch his chart-filled
- infomercials, and Perot's classic American optimism is instantly
- recognizable. Everything will be fine, he says, if we roll up
- our sleeves and get under the hood to fix the car.
- </p>
- <p> Perot's specialty is clothing demagoguery with a semblance
- -- sometimes even a facsimile -- of wit and down-to-earth
- common sense. His call to "shared sacrifice" resonates with the
- nation's history ("The only thing we have to fear is fear
- itself") and lends a certain credibility to his painful
- prescriptions. Much of what he proposes is philosophically
- charming, but the sacrifice he posits would be borne unequally,
- and his numbers are as questionable as those of his rivals. His
- pie charts and bar graphs convey heft, but when studied
- carefully, the bottom line relies on so many dubious and
- unspecific assumptions (how, exactly, are health-care costs to
- be contained?) that his repeated assertion is effectively
- refuted: it is not "just that simple."
- </p>
- <p> Yet if the polls can be trusted (and even if they cannot,
- the rising worries of Bill Clinton and George Bush speak
- volumes), Perot has the potential to disrupt next week's
- election. Many Americans, it seems, are ready to squander their
- franchise -- which, of course, is not exactly the way Perot sees
- it: "You are throwing your vote away unless you vote your
- conscience." While indisputably attractive, these underdog's
- words fail on close inspection.
- </p>
- <p> Consider first Perot's personality and temperament. It
- does not require a degree in psychology to recognize a
- world-class paranoid. Perot starts with a firm conviction of his
- own superior gifts and high destiny. Then, if his actual
- situation falls short, he looks for scapegoats. In Perot's mind,
- nothing that has ever retarded his many causes has been his
- fault. Whether it is a band of shortsighted General Motors
- directors, government officials callously abandoning soldiers
- in Southeast Asia or journalists scrutinizing his background,
- Perot routinely views himself as the helpless victim of dark
- conspiracies. Is the collective memory so short that we cannot
- recall July, when, at a high point, Perot inexplicably closed
- his campaign with the brutality of a plant manager pink-slipping
- loyal workers at Christmas? Have we forgotten that without
- warning Perot stranded the millions who had poured their time
- and money into his effort, those whom he had repeatedly promised
- to "serve" selflessly if only they would follow his lead? Can
- anyone seriously believe "the people" called him back when the
- evidence proves that Perot himself staged and bankrolled the
- "grass-roots" cry for his return?
- </p>
- <p> Aside from his entering, quitting and then re-entering,
- the only public decision by which to judge Perot's judgment has
- been the selection of his running mate, James Stockdale.
- Leading the nation is serious business, but one swipes at
- Stockdale only gingerly because he is such a sympathetic figure.
- Thus it is perhaps best to conjure the national nightmare a
- Stockdale presidency might induce by adopting the observation
- of a political satirist: a Stockdale succession, says Mark
- Russell, is probably the only catastrophe that could cause the
- nation to pine for Dan Quayle.
- </p>
- <p> Still, many voters are angry and frustrated. They want to
- protest the process that has served up Bush and Clinton. They
- want to send a message. Some want merely to telegraph their
- disgust. Others want Clinton and Bush to take the deficit more
- seriously -- which, thanks to Perot, they are already doing. If
- it were possible, we would all gather in a giant electronic town
- hall and divvy up the vote: so much for whomever the majority
- wants to win, with a healthy percentage for Perot just to keep
- the victor honest. But the Electoral College complicates life.
- A voter who hates Bush above everything and casts his ballot
- for Perot may end up helping the President carry the voter's
- state, just as a Clinton despiser who goes for Perot may end up
- aiding the Arkansas Governor.
- </p>
- <p> What to do? If you seriously favor Perot for President,
- vote for him. If not, watch the polls carefully and shy away
- from casting a protest ballot if there seems any reasonable
- chance that the outcome could be distorted by too many others
- venting their anger. Remember that in a democratic republic, a
- citizen discharges his duty not by making a vindictive gesture
- but by voting as if the outcome depended entirely on his vote
- alone. It's just that simple.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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